Online tools typically work by taking a few inputs—injury type, treatment duration, and losses—and producing a rough range. That can be useful for planning questions to ask your lawyer.
However, Flat Rock-area truck crashes frequently involve complications that calculators can’t reliably capture, such as:
- Lane-change and merge scenarios on busy corridors where braking distance and visibility are disputed
- Late-onset symptoms after impact (back, neck, and soft-tissue injuries that worsen after the initial adrenaline)
- Multiple potential defendants (driver, trucking company, maintenance provider, cargo-related parties)
- Evidence delays—for example, when footage must be requested from nearby businesses or roadway systems
A tool can’t tell whether the insurance company will argue the injury wasn’t caused by the crash, that treatment was unrelated, or that the truck company followed the right policies.


